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Wall
Street Crooks Need More Than A
'Slap
On the Wrist'
by
Ralph Nader
May
3, 2003
Responding
to criticism that he and other regulators had gone lightly in fining ten large
Wall Street firms $1.4 billion for alleged conflicts of interests, New York
Attorney General Eliot L. Spitzer contended that harsher penalties would have
done more harm than good for the economy. "We made a decision not to
destroy these financial institutions," he told reporters.
Never
mind that some of the small investors who lost hundreds of billions of dollars
were themselves nearly destroyed because of the misleading information they
received from these bank and brokerage analysts, who, for their own profits,
continued to issue "buy" recommendations even as companies' shares
plummeted. Never mind that even New York Times columnist Paul Krugman calls the
fines a "slap on the wrist". Never mind that after the settlement was
announced Morgan Stanley's chairman said: "I don't see anything in the
settlement that will concern the retail investor about Morgan Stanley. Not one
thing."
Spitzer
deserves his due. He filled a regulatory vacuum left by an under-staffed and
weakly led SEC. He went after the biggest names on Wall Street, exposing a
culture soaked through with greed and corruption. But Spitzer should also know
that deterrence is an important aspect of crime prevention. And the kid-glove
penalties that Spitzer and other regulators meted out last week are hardly the
stuff of deterrence.
Criminal
enforcement actions are infrequent. The Wall Street firms, like almost all
corporate defendants, know that corporate crime prosecution budgets are so
inadequate that state and federal agencies are hard-pressed to enforce criminal
laws for blatantly defrauding small investors. With no credible threat and no
credible deterrent, corporate criminals, and then bigcorporate law firms, need
not be worried.
For
Citigroup, $300 million in fines and disgorgement is less than 1 percent of
last year's revenues, which topped $92 billion. Likewise, Credit Suisse First
Boston's penalty of $150 million is barely pennies on the dollar of the $56
billion in revenues it took in last year. These fines come nowhere near the $7
trillion dollars that investors lost since it became apparent that the
corruption on Wall Street is endemic.
Truly
shocking is that the majority of the settlement may yet be tax deductible
and/or covered under insurance - everything except $487 million in civil
penalties, according to Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa), head of the Senate
Finance Committee.
On
Monday, Grassley wrote: "The material made available to me so far
indicates that limitations on tax deductibility and insurance reimbursement do
not apply to the $387 million in disgorgement, the $432 million in independent
research, and the $80 million in investor education." He plans to
introduce legislation to guarantee that the costs of all future
government-imposed settlements regarding any alleged violations are not shifted
onto taxpayers.
Even
more astonishing, however, is that these financial institutions and banks got
off the hook without a single admission of wrongdoing. What this means is that
defrauded small investors, who already have had the decks stacked against them
by years of lawmakers' rolling back investor rights to seek restitution in the
courts (most notably the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995), now
will now have an even more difficult time getting their day in court.
Spitzer
notably made public a thick collection of Wall Street communications that
reveal just how callous many of these high-flyers were. One e-mail from a Lehman
Brothers analyst stated "well, ratings and price targets are fairly
meaningless anyway, but yes, the "little guy" who isn't smart about
the nuances may get misled, such is the nature of my business." Spitzer
said he released these documents for the use of defrauded investors.
It
is time for some old fashion reforms. Federal and state governments must
increase resources devoted to corporate crime enforcement. Congress should also
repeal the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, which made it more
difficult for defrauded investors to sue. The only way to end the corruption on
Wall Street is to send a message that securities firms engaged in defrauding
small investors will be punished to the full extent of the law and their
culpable top executives will be convicted and sent to jail.
It
is also time to break up the behemoth Wall Street financial powerhouses. The
Republicans and Democrats spent the last decade repealing Depression era
protections for investors and allowing financial institutions to combine in
unprecedented ways. Firms should never be allowed to combine stock research,
investment banking (selling shares to the public) and brokerage (buying shares
for customers). Firms now have an ongoing incentive to provide rosy research and
have their brokerage firm push stocks on individuals that benefit not the
individuals, but the Wall Street firms' corporate clients.
Congress
and state regulators need to bring back the Glass-Steagal Act, which separated
banking from investing and even extend it. Until the research function is
separated from the brokerage and investment banking function completely, Main
Street will not believe Wall Street and certainly will not entrust it with
their now plundered retirement savings.
Ralph Nader is America’s
leading consumer advocate. He is the founder of numerous public interest groups
including Public Citizen, and has twice
run for President as a Green Party candidate. His
latest book is Crashing the Party: How to Tell the Truth and Still Run for
President (St. Martin’s Press, 2002)
* For more information on corporate accountability visit: http://www.citizenworks.org